For those of us whose faith isn’t always rock steady, whose spiritual journey is full of ups and downs, by which I guess I mean all of us, Peter is our example and our hope. Just last Sunday, we heard Jesus tell Peter he had received a revelation from God, was the rock on which…
On Sunday the August 24th we were privileged to have the Rev. Bruce Torrey celebrate with us at both services and talk about the work of Food for the Poor, which provides food, housing and other assistance to the neediest people in the Caribbean and Latin America.
In the reading from Genesis, the soap opera of the descendants of Abraham continues. Joseph, condemned to slavery in Egypt by his envious brothers, becomes Pharaoh’s chief of staff. When famine strikes the land, his brothers are forced to ask for help from Pharaoh, making an awful choice between slavery and starvation. And are they…
We’ve been reading the saga of Abraham and his descendants all summer long, but I’ve only addressed it from the pulpit once, when we heard the story of the binding of Isaac. With Joseph’s story we’re now at the fourth generation of this most famous of dysfunctional families. Because some of you haven’t been here…
To be honest, I had intended to talk about Jacob this Sunday. We’ve been reading the story of Jacob for a few weeks now, and it seemed like about time that we reflected on what we’ve been reading, but when we received the urgent request from Mount Airy Net to replenish the shelves of the…
Today we celebrate our church’s name day – the feast of Saint James the Elder. It might be useful to start with some of what Wikipedia calls disambiguation, because there are a lot of James’s who are significant to the church. There is, of course, King James the First of England, who gives us the…
Last week, we began reading a portion of Matthew’s Gospel that tells of Jesus teaching the increasingly large crowds that appear wherever he goes using parables. Today, and for the next few weeks, we will continue to hear what Jesus has to say to his followers, both the stories he tells publicly, and the interpretations of the stories he offers to his…
“Listen! A sower went out to sow.” This is the first of a string of parables that comprise the thirteenth chapter of Matthew’s gospel. Matthew begins this thirteenth chapter by telling us that the things he is talking about happened on the same day as those that end the previous chapter, which is the storyteller’s way of saying that the two narratives…
Most of you, I’m sure, are familiar with the musical setting of the end of today’s Gospel lesson that concludes the first part of Handel’s Messiah. Charles Jennens, Handel’s librettist, changed the scripture text from first person to third to fit the context of the oratorio, but whether it’s Jesus saying “My yoke is easy,” or a chorus singing “His yoke is…
As I hope you’ve come to know by now, I take scripture very seriously. All of it. The parts that make sense to me and the parts that don’t. The parts that give me joy and the parts that make me angry. The parts I like and the parts I don’t like. And there are lots of parts in scripture that are…